โOct-21-2019 10:54 AM
โJan-21-2020 11:26 AM
mountainkowboy wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:mountainkowboy wrote:
I go between Or and CA all the time and go through the "AG" stops all the time. I have been asked a few times if they can "inspect" the inside of my TC for whatever, I just laugh at them and say no. They have no authority for such...in fact 90% of the time the Leo's don't have the authority, but people are intimidated by the request and submit to it, why I have no idea.
Know your rights and demand respect from ANYONE, or be a sheep and get trampled on.
I'm sorry if I found this incredulous. I don't think you'll even be asked, and you'll just be waived at the border if you have a Oregon license plate. That's within flying distance of any insect and don't need you car to be transported. These nearby states, up to WA have joint-coordinated pest control protocols.
Really? you've ridden with my wife and I driving in and out of CA over the last 10 years? I love the drivel of some people who choose there own "truths" over others facts. You can choose your "alternate" reality if you wish, but quit making statements about things that you don't have first hand knowledge of.
โJan-21-2020 11:11 AM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:mountainkowboy wrote:
I go between Or and CA all the time and go through the "AG" stops all the time. I have been asked a few times if they can "inspect" the inside of my TC for whatever, I just laugh at them and say no. They have no authority for such...in fact 90% of the time the Leo's don't have the authority, but people are intimidated by the request and submit to it, why I have no idea.
Know your rights and demand respect from ANYONE, or be a sheep and get trampled on.
I'm sorry if I found this incredulous. I don't think you'll even be asked, and you'll just be waived at the border if you have a Oregon license plate. That's within flying distance of any insect and don't need you car to be transported. These nearby states, up to WA have joint-coordinated pest control protocols.
โJan-21-2020 09:50 AM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:am1958 wrote:
That is exactly what I have been saying - the food/Ag Drone has no power to search and his/her only chance to be allowed to search is through the permission of the traveler... a refusal to be searched means that you nor your goods may not enter. If you turn around and drive away then there is absolutely nothing the drone can or should do...
Nice weasel out!
Isn't that what everyone suggested to the OP and where you lied and scared them sh!tless with psychiatrically paranoid rant that they are "giving up their rights"?
You can now raise your pants backup and pretend nothing happened.
Actually you can continue on like this guy did. :B
โJan-21-2020 08:39 AM
JRscooby wrote:I personally like the idea that someone is watching my every move. That way, when I get the feeling my life is boring all I have to do is think about the poor sap that drew my name as a surveillance target.
This post likely will be deleted for political reason, but a short study of history. I understand the idea the few travelers should be willing to give up their privacy for the good of the ag industry.
A while back Snowden released proof the government was recording phone calls and reading e-mails. In the discussions behind that "If you are doing nothing wrong, you have nothing to hide" was the stated policy of one political party. If you follow that idea, then somebody that says "No. You need a warrant to search my house/office/whatever" than any judge appointed/confirmed by that party might think "He doesn't want LEO in, must be hiding something." This could turn the "No!" into probable cause.
โJan-21-2020 08:30 AM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:Alan_Hepburn wrote:
You certainly have the right to refuse a search, but then they also have the right to tell you to turn around and go back the way you came...
Did you watch the video I posted before you wrote this?
Why, what did you see something that we don't at the end of the video? The inspector and the LEO was telling the a**hole couple to turn-around and go back to Arizona.
Do you think they got their way? The LEO even warned them.
โJan-21-2020 08:05 AM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:Alan_Hepburn wrote:
You certainly have the right to refuse a search, but then they also have the right to tell you to turn around and go back the way you came...
Did you watch the video I posted before you wrote this?
โJan-21-2020 06:44 AM
โJan-21-2020 06:19 AM
am1958 wrote:
So, no. Refusal to permit a warrantless search does not equal probable cause. However, the officer way deem it so but when it comes to court any charges stemming from the illegal search should be dismissed by the court or upon appeal.
โJan-21-2020 05:05 AM
In short (and as summed up in a footnote), police cannot use someone's constitutionally-protected right to refuse a search as probable cause to justify a search. The ruling is reversed and remanded and the police are now in the same position they were before they performed the warrantless search: looking at someone they want to arrest but without the probable cause to do so. And now it's so much worse because the officer knows Barker was in possession of a controlled substance but can't do anything about it. With the evidence suppressed, the single possession charge resulting from this arrest no longer exists.
These rights weren't granted to citizens just so the government could use any exercise of them against those availing themselves of these protections. They were supposed to safeguard citizens against governmental overreach and abuse of its powers, but default mode seems to be that only the guilty assert their rights. This mindset is so perverse -- and so pervasive -- that it has to be beaten back one court decision at a time. Law enforcement officers treat assertions of rights as, at best, an annoyance and at worst, tacit admissions of guilt. To operate under such a twisted interpretation displays an almost incomprehensible level of privilege -- where government agents are owed whatever they request and any failure to cooperate is treated with suspicion.
โJan-21-2020 03:07 AM
โJan-20-2020 05:28 PM
Alan_Hepburn wrote:
You certainly have the right to refuse a search, but then they also have the right to tell you to turn around and go back the way you came...
โJan-20-2020 01:50 PM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
All irrelevant, stay on topic!
โJan-20-2020 01:41 PM
am1958 wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:am1958 wrote:
Actually, upon reflection, someone should close this thread before Sam does himself a critical injury...
The risk of injury is only to the brains. And it that regard, you are well safe.:B
Finally, your failure to address the question at hand while making a potentially accurate and thus funny comment demonstrates that you concede...
What's sad is that that it took a British citizen to explain to you your rights under American law. Don't feel bad, I rarely meet people that know their rights here which is unbelievably sad... I left my country to come to the freedom your Constitution and Bill of Rights afford you only to find that so few of you seem to care to maintain those freedoms.
What's happening in Virginia right now is a great example... If you really pay attention it's an argument for an Electoral College in every state.
[Edit] Oops, you edited your last post... Too late...[/Edit]
โJan-20-2020 01:25 PM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:am1958 wrote:
Actually, upon reflection, someone should close this thread before Sam does himself a critical injury...
The risk of injury is only to the brains. And it that regard, you are well safe.:B
โJan-20-2020 01:12 PM
am1958 wrote:
Actually, upon reflection, someone should close this thread before Sam does himself a critical injury...